Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts

© 2015 by iSER, International Society of Educational Research. This study investigated the year 12 students’ (N = 56) understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts after instruction using two conceptual tests, the Chemical Equilibrium Conceptual Test 1(CECT-1) consisting of nine two-tier multiple-c...

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Main Authors: Karpudewan, M., Treagust, David, Mocerino, Mauro, Won, Mihye, Chandrasegaran, Chandra
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26746
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author Karpudewan, M.
Treagust, David
Mocerino, Mauro
Won, Mihye
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
author_facet Karpudewan, M.
Treagust, David
Mocerino, Mauro
Won, Mihye
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
author_sort Karpudewan, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2015 by iSER, International Society of Educational Research. This study investigated the year 12 students’ (N = 56) understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts after instruction using two conceptual tests, the Chemical Equilibrium Conceptual Test 1(CECT-1) consisting of nine two-tier multiple-choice items and the Chemical Equilibrium Conceptual Test 2(CECT-2) consisting of four structured questions. Both these tests were administered before and after the intervention. Students’ responses to the items in both the instruments indicated limited understanding of the various concepts related to chemical equilibrium. Less than 50% of the students provided correct responses to four of the nine items in the CECT-1. The total scores in the CECT-1 ranged from 0 to 8 with a mean score of 4.14 (out of a maximum of 9). In the CECT-2 the total scores ranged from 7 to 17 with a mean score of 11.0 out of a maximum score of 22. Almost half the number of students (44.6%) scored less than 50% of the total marks in the CECT-2; only 0% to 42.9% of students scored the maximum possible marks for each of the four items while achievement in all four items of the CECT-2 was below 50%. The findings will be valuable and assist teachers in planning their instruction on chemical equilibrium by taking into consideration students’ preconceptions about the topic.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-267462017-09-13T21:24:49Z Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts Karpudewan, M. Treagust, David Mocerino, Mauro Won, Mihye Chandrasegaran, Chandra © 2015 by iSER, International Society of Educational Research. This study investigated the year 12 students’ (N = 56) understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts after instruction using two conceptual tests, the Chemical Equilibrium Conceptual Test 1(CECT-1) consisting of nine two-tier multiple-choice items and the Chemical Equilibrium Conceptual Test 2(CECT-2) consisting of four structured questions. Both these tests were administered before and after the intervention. Students’ responses to the items in both the instruments indicated limited understanding of the various concepts related to chemical equilibrium. Less than 50% of the students provided correct responses to four of the nine items in the CECT-1. The total scores in the CECT-1 ranged from 0 to 8 with a mean score of 4.14 (out of a maximum of 9). In the CECT-2 the total scores ranged from 7 to 17 with a mean score of 11.0 out of a maximum score of 22. Almost half the number of students (44.6%) scored less than 50% of the total marks in the CECT-2; only 0% to 42.9% of students scored the maximum possible marks for each of the four items while achievement in all four items of the CECT-2 was below 50%. The findings will be valuable and assist teachers in planning their instruction on chemical equilibrium by taking into consideration students’ preconceptions about the topic. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26746 10.12973/ijese.2015.280a restricted
spellingShingle Karpudewan, M.
Treagust, David
Mocerino, Mauro
Won, Mihye
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title_full Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title_fullStr Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title_full_unstemmed Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title_short Investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
title_sort investigating high school students’ understanding of chemical equilibrium concepts
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26746